Friday, January 13, 2012

Pierce's Picks - NFL Divisional Championship Weekend

I went 2-2 last week, missing on New Orleans and Denver.

You may notice as you look at this week's slate of games that last week, all four Wild Card teams were eliminated.  Home teams went 4-0 last week.  Will it happen again?  History says the divisional round is the most lopsided in favor of the home team (check the stats, really).

Saturday at 4:30pm ET -
New Orleans (3-seed) @ San Francisco (2-seed)
I feel like New Orleans is the team to beat right now in the NFC.  Say what you want about the Packers, but is any team playing offense as well as the Saints?  The Packers might be the most dynamic offense, but the Saints are becoming the most efficient.  Shut down the run and they'll smoke you through the air.  Take away their deep routes and they'll gash you short and with the run.  They look indomitable.  But the common maxim has always been that defense wins championships.  That theory is put to the test in this game - the better offense or the better defense?  I'm taking the Saints' offense, and a defense that's just good enough.

Saturday at 8:00pm ET -
Denver (4-seed) @ New England (1-seed)
Tim vs. Tom.  Denver's win last week was improbable and came against a battered Pittsburgh defense - make no mistake; Ike Taylor is not a great CB and the Steelers were playing all backups on their D-line.  However, Pittsburgh's second-string defense is probably better than New England's first-string.  But the Patriots offense, if it gets going, can shred Denver's defense.  The onus of this game really falls on Denver's defense: can they make Brady uncomfortable and knock him off his rhythm?  If yes, they have a chance.  If not, then they'll get eviscerated again.  If Tebow plays like he did last week and the Denver defense can tee off on Brady, Denver wins.  But I don't think both of those things happen.  Patriots roll, but it won't be as lopsided as their last meeting.

Sunday at 1:00pm ET -
Houston (3-seed) @ Baltimore (2-seed)
I expect our AFC Super Bowl representative to be this game's winner.  This will be a nasty game, a black-and-blue game, with the two best running backs in the game leading their teams.  Arian Foster and Ray Rice are absolute beasts.  Both teams play marvelous defense.  It's going to come down to which quarterback stays cool under pressure and can make the tough throw in the clutch.  I think Houston's ability to spell Foster with Ben Tate is an advantage for them, but I think Baltimore gets a big advantage with playoff-tested Joe Flacco, as opposed to T.J. Yates.  Houston could pull this off.  But I think they're a young team, new to the playoffs, going up against an experienced team on their turf.  Veteran savvy of guys like Ray Lewis and Terrell Suggs will lead the defense; the poise of Joe Flacco will be the difference between the two teams on offense.  Baltimore will win a close, hard-fought game.

Sunday at 4:30pm ET -
NY Giants (4-seed) @ Green Bay (1-seed)
The Giants have suddenly played three remarkable games in a row.  In the regular season, we're bracing for the inevitable "how'd they lose that one" game.  In the playoffs, well, 2007 taught us anything is possible.  The Giants defense is meshing at the right time; they crushed Atlanta.  The defensive line might be the best in the playoffs right now.  If Kansas City can beat Green Bay, anyone can, and the G-Men are no strangers to playing in the cold.  It's a lot like the Denver/New England game - if they can get pressure on Rodgers and Eli doesn't make mistakes, they win.  And Rodgers hasn't played in three weeks, since McCarthy gave him Week 17 off.  I've seen teams struggle after resting starters on Week 17, but I don't think that happens to Green Bay.  Rodgers has been playing out of his mind and for them to lose their first playoff game this season would be a resounding disappointment.  I think the Giants have a great chance at an upset here, but I don't see it happening.

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